Quick Answer

The fastest option is a rental car (4–5 hours inland, from ~€20/day plus ~€35 fuel). The cheapest is the local furgon bus from the South & North Terminal (€15, departures from 05:30). The best all-round option for most travellers — especially those who want comfort without the stress of driving in Albania — is the RivieraBus tourist shuttle (€50, Wed/Fri/Sun in summer), which takes the coastal route with drop-offs along the Riviera. Private transfers via Daytrip start from €52/seat and suit groups, families with luggage, or late-night arrivals.

Tirana is where almost every Albanian Riviera trip begins. You land at Tirana International Airport (TIA), collect your bags, and suddenly face a 265–280 kilometre journey south to the coast. The route, the options and the prices are genuinely confusing at first glance — forum posts refer to “furgons” and “Blloku pickups”, Google Maps suggests an implausible four-hour drive, and ride-hailing apps show nothing useful for a 280 km intercity leg.

This guide cuts through it. Below you will find every realistic transport option for getting from Tirana to Saranda and Ksamil in 2026, with 2026 prices, honest assessments, and direct links to book where relevant. If you haven’t decided whether Ksamil is the right destination, read our full Ksamil honest verdict first.

Your Options at a Glance

Seven ways to cover the ground between Tirana and the Albanian Riviera. The table below summarises what each costs and who it suits.

OptionDurationCost 2026Best for
Rental car4–5h (inland) / 5–6h+ (coastal)~€20–30/day + €30–40 fuelGroups 3+, freedom-seekers, families
Furgon (local bus)4h 15min–5h (inland)€15/person (1,500 ALL)Solo travellers, budget travellers
RivieraBus tourist shuttle~6h (scenic coastal route)€50/person (full route)Comfort-seekers, coastal stops en route
Private transfer~4h 20minFrom €52/seat (Daytrip)Groups, families with luggage, night arrivals
Taxi4–5h€140–200 (whole car)Nobody — see warning below
Domestic flightN/ADoes not existNot an option in 2026
TrainN/ADoes not existNot an option — no rail route south

Option 1: Rent a Car

Renting a car is the most versatile way to travel from Tirana to the Albanian Riviera. You move on your own schedule, stop wherever you like, and — for groups of three or more — the cost per head often beats the bus once you factor in onward transport around Ksamil. Localrent aggregates most Albanian rental operators and is the easiest place to compare prices.

The two routes

Inland route (recommended for speed): Tirana → Durrës → Fier → Tepelenë → Gjirokastër → Saranda. Approximately 265 km, driving time 4–5 hours. The road is fast and in good condition throughout, according to TIC Rent Car’s 2026 route guide. This is the sensible choice if you’re arriving late or just want to get south. You can always do a day trip north along the coastal road once you’re based in Ksamil.

Coastal SH8 route (scenic): Tirana → Durrës → Fier → Vlorë → Llogara Pass or Tunnel → Dhërmi → Himarë → Saranda. Around 280 km, but realistically 5–6 hours minimum — and a genuinely full day if you stop at Dhërmi beach or Himarë for lunch. The payoff is one of the most dramatic coastal drives in Europe: the SH8 road clings to limestone cliffs with the Ionian Sea hundreds of metres below. On a clear day, Corfu is visible across the channel. See our Albanian Riviera overview for more on the coastal stops worth making.

The Llogara Tunnel

If you take the coastal route, you’ll encounter the Llogara mountain crossing. The good news is that a 5.9 km tunnel opened in 2024/2025, reducing the mountain crossing from a 30+ minute switchback drive to approximately 7 minutes. The toll is 250 ALL (around €2.50) one-way, or 500 ALL return for cars. Motorcycles pay 100 ALL; vans and buses 1,000 ALL. Pay in Albanian lek cash — card availability at the toll is not confirmed, according to Balkanweb’s toll reporting. Bring small-denomination notes.

Fuel and road conditions

A standard compact car uses roughly 20–25 litres between Tirana and Saranda. Albanian petrol costs approximately 178 ALL per litre (~€1.78), so budget €30–40 for fuel one way. Both routes are fully paved; you do not need an SUV. The only caveat — sections of the SH8 south of Porto Palermo can be prone to landslides after heavy rain, but summer risk is near zero, as noted by Himara.net’s 2026 road conditions update.

Where to rent

Rental desks at TIA airport include the Best Western Premier Ark Hotel 300 metres from the terminal. Localrent lists rates from around €20–30/day for a compact in standard season. Localrent is a solid alternative with transparent pricing, no hidden fees, and local operators who often waive one-way drop-off charges that international chains impose ($177–$400 extra per QEEQ one-way rental data). If you plan to drop the car in Saranda rather than returning to Tirana, always confirm the one-way policy before you book. Search current Tirana Airport rental prices on Localrent →

Parking in Ksamil: There is no formal metered parking in Ksamil. Street parking is informal and in peak July–August it becomes genuinely difficult near the main beach. Arrive early or choose accommodation with a private car park. The extra cost is worth it.

Option 2: The Furgon (Local Bus)

The furgon is the Albanian intercity minibus — shared, cash-only and entirely functional once you know how to use it. For solo travellers or anyone on a strict budget, it is the obvious choice at 1,500 ALL (approximately €15 per person).

Where to catch it

All buses to Saranda depart from the South and North Albania Bus Terminal (Terminali i Autobusave të Veriut dhe Jugut), near the Casa Italia shopping centre at the intersection of Rruga 29 Nëntori and Rruga Kastriotet, according to Sandal Tan Man’s Albania bus guide. From Tirana Airport, take the Luna airport bus (400 ALL / €4) toward the city centre and ask the driver to let you off at Casa Italia — the terminal is a two-minute walk from there. There is also a direct 300 ALL terminal bus from the airport that runs 07:00–18:00 hourly and connects directly to this station, per the official Tirana Airport bus page.

Schedule and price

There are approximately 10 departures per day, earliest at 05:30 and latest at 22:00 (summer only). Confirmed departure times include 05:30, 07:30, 08:30, 09:45, 12:30, 16:00 and 22:00, per Anita Hendrieka’s 2026 timetable guide and Albania Tour Guide. The fare is paid in cash to the driver when you board — online booking is not standard practice for local buses. Euros and Albanian lek are both generally accepted.

Journey time

On the fast inland route, expect 4 hours 15 minutes to 5 hours. The scenic coastal route via Vlorë and the Riviera takes 6 hours or more. Coastal scenic buses run at 07:00, 10:30 and 15:30 and are operated by Olgeno Travel and Tours, according to Albania Tour Guide. If you want the coastal views without having to drive, the Olgeno service is worth considering — just allow a full day.

Getting to Ksamil

There is no direct bus from Tirana to Ksamil. Take the bus to Saranda, then catch a local bus south to Ksamil: these run approximately every 30 minutes, take 25 minutes, and cost just 150 ALL (about €1.50), per UndeterminedPath’s Ksamil guide. Total door-to-door cost for the whole journey is under €20. Once in Ksamil, you can look at accommodation options via Booking.com Ksamil.

What to expect on the bus

Cash is essential — there are no card readers. The driver may depart before the scheduled time if the bus fills up, so arrive at least 30 minutes early. Luggage goes in the hold beneath the bus and you handle it yourself. Air conditioning is not guaranteed on every operator; some buses in peak summer are overcrowded. None of this is a disaster — it is how most Albanians travel and it works — but it is worth knowing beforehand so you’re not caught out, as noted by travellers on Reddit’s r/albania.

Watch out: Touts near the bus terminal may approach you claiming the next bus is full or delayed and offer a “private” taxi. This is a common scam. The bus will be there. Ignore the touts and walk to the platform.

Option 3: RivieraBus Tourist Shuttle

RivieraBus is the most comfortable public transport option on the Tirana–Riviera corridor, and the only service designed specifically for English-speaking tourists. It is not cheap — €50 per person for the full Tirana–Saranda route — but it delivers something the furgon cannot: a reserved seat, air conditioning, free Wi-Fi, bottled water, and the scenic coastal route with drop-offs at Dhërmi, Vuno, Himarë, Borsh and Saranda (including Ksamil).

The shuttle departs from the Blloku area of Tirana at 9:00am and runs Wednesday, Friday and Sunday during July and August only. The return service from Saranda departs at 16:30. A half-route option (Vlorë to Saranda) is available for €30. The vehicle is an air-conditioned minivan accommodating up to seven passengers. Online booking is required — walk-up seats are not available. Check availability and book via the official RivieraBus website, where the schedule for the current summer is posted.

The TripAdvisor profile for RivieraBus Albania carries positive reviews from travellers who value the door-to-stop service and the ability to watch the coastline unfold without worrying about driving. The limitation is the three-days-per-week schedule — if you’re not flexible on travel day, you will need an alternative. For those who are flexible, this is the premium English-language option.

Option 4: Private Transfer

A pre-booked private transfer means a confirmed vehicle, a named driver, meet-and-greet at the airport or hotel, and a fixed price — no negotiation, no surprises. The door-to-door journey takes approximately 4 hours 20 minutes.

Price range (2026)

  • Daytrip.com: From €52–€58 per seat, door-to-door with an English-speaking driver and free 24-hour cancellation. Also covers Tirana to Ksamil directly. This is the most transparent pricing available for this route.
  • TripAdvisor-listed premium operators: From approximately $172 per adult, with group pricing making it significantly cheaper per head for 3–4 people, as listed on TripAdvisor.
  • GetTransfer: Driver-bid marketplace — typical winning bids €130–180 for the whole car (€33–45 per seat with four sharing). You see vehicle, reviews and price before paying.
  • Kiwitaxi: Fixed fares calculated at booking, certified drivers in vehicles under seven years old, via Kiwitaxi Tirana–Saranda.

When it’s worth it

Private transfers make the most financial sense for groups of three to five splitting the cost — at €52/seat, a group of four comes out at €52 per head, which is competitive with the rental car once you add fuel and insurance. They are also the right call for families travelling with young children and a lot of luggage; for anyone arriving on a late-night flight when the furgon has already run; and for anyone who simply wants the journey handled without needing to navigate Albania’s bus system on day one. Book accommodation in Saranda via Booking.com Saranda to sort the other end of the trip at the same time.

Compare private transfer bids in one search

If you’d rather not commit to a fixed-fare operator before seeing the actual driver and car, GetTransfer opens your route to a marketplace of vetted drivers who bid against each other. You pick the offer, see the vehicle and reviews, and only pay then. Free cancellation included.

Search GetTransfer for this route ↗

Option 5: Taxi — Don’t

A locally arranged taxi from Tirana to Saranda costs approximately €140–200 for the whole car if agreed properly in advance, according to Albania Tour Guide. That might sound reasonable for a group — but in practice, random airport taxis and touts regularly quote €300 or more to new arrivals, as documented on Reddit r/albania.

The problem is not the concept — a pre-negotiated taxi is a legitimate way to travel in Albania — it is the information asymmetry. Unless you know the correct price and are prepared to walk away, you are likely to overpay. The better alternatives above (Daytrip private transfer, RivieraBus) offer fixed published pricing with no negotiation required. Unless you have a specific, trusted driver recommended by your accommodation, the street taxi to Saranda is not worth the stress.

Option 6: Domestic Flight — Still No

There are no scheduled domestic flights between Tirana and Saranda or Ksamil in 2026. Albania has no internal airline route network for this corridor, per Rome2rio’s route data.

Vlorë Airport (VLO) has been in the news. It received its IATA code in April 2025 and completed a first certification flight that May. Chair Airlines, the Swiss carrier, officially announced a Zürich–Vlorë (ZRH–VLO) service starting 26 June 2026 — one flight per week on an Airbus A319, per AeroRoutes’ NS26 schedule. Fares are reportedly around €120. A more detailed overview from Vlore Circle covers the route announcement.

The critical caveat: VLO is an incoming international airport, not a domestic hub. It does not create a Tirana→Riviera air connection. Even if you’re flying from Zürich and land at Vlorë, you still need to travel south by road to Saranda and Ksamil. There have been repeated deadline delays — the original target was end of 2024, pushed to summer 2025, then 2026 — and as of Albania Daily News’ March 2026 report, industry operators remain split on whether commercial flights will begin on schedule. Plan as if no domestic air option exists.

Option 7: Train — Still No

There is no rail route between Tirana and Saranda. Albania’s railway network is limited and does not serve the southern coast. The only operational route runs Tirana–Durrës–Shkodër. Do not look for a train on this journey; it simply does not exist.

Best Time to Make the Drive

If you are renting a car, the timing of your departure from Tirana matters more than most guides acknowledge.

Avoid Friday afternoon. Friday PM out of Tirana is the single worst time to start the journey south: domestic weekend traffic combines with tourist departures, and the road from Tirana toward Durrës can slow to a crawl. The same applies to Sunday evening for the return direction. The TIC Rent Car Riviera road trip guide recommends leaving before 08:00 or after 10:00 to avoid Tirana’s morning traffic entirely.

Peak season (July–August) adds time. The section around Llogara Pass sees heavy tour-bus traffic in July and August. The tunnel mitigates this — if you haven’t tried the old pass road, it’s scenic, but in peak season it is significantly slower. On the return journey, the tunnel is the sensible choice.

Shoulder season is a pleasure. Late May through June and September through early October are the sweet spots for the drive: warm enough to swim at stops along the way, the coastal road is rarely congested, and parking at Riviera beaches is generally easy. For the full timing picture, see our month-by-month Albanian Riviera guide.

Fuel note: Fill up in Tirana or a major town like Fier before heading onto the coastal road. Petrol stations exist along the SH8 but are less frequent south of Vlorë. Albanian fuel is approximately 178 ALL/litre (~€1.78), so a full tank from Tirana comfortably covers the journey to Saranda and back.

Tirana Before or After the Riviera?

The majority of travellers fly into TIA and head straight to the Riviera, treating Tirana as a transit point. That works — but it misses something. Tirana in 2026 is a genuinely interesting city: the MVRDV-renovated Pyramid of Tirana, the Bunk’Art bunker museums, the House of Leaves spy museum, and the Blloku district’s café scene are all worth a half-day or a full overnight.

We recommend doing Tirana first. Fly in, spend one or two nights, sort your logistics (SIM card, local cash from a city ATM — better rates than at the airport, car rental pickup) and get a feel for Albanian culture in a manageable urban setting before heading to the more remote south. After the beach, you return to Tirana for your flight home without needing to cram the city on the first day. This structure also works practically: Tirana first means you are driving south with a fresh head, not a sunburned one.

If you prefer to end the trip on an urban high, Tirana last is equally valid — and there is an argument that you will appreciate the communist-era history more after having seen the bunkers and military installations along the Riviera road. Either way, build at least one night in. Our forthcoming Tirana stopover guide covers the highlights, best restaurants and where to stay near the airport versus city centre.

Cost Comparison: Solo, Couple, Family of Four

To make the numbers concrete, here is what each of the main transport options costs per scenario for a one-way Tirana to Saranda/Ksamil trip in 2026.

OptionSolo travellerCoupleFamily of 4
Furgon bus (+ Saranda–Ksamil local bus)€16.50€33€66
RivieraBus shuttle€50€100€200
Rental car (compact, 1 day, fuel, tunnel toll)€55–75€55–75 (shared)€55–75 (shared)
Daytrip private transfer€52–58€104–116€208–232
Taxi (pre-negotiated)€140–200€140–200 (shared)€140–200 (shared)

The rental car is the standout option for a couple or family of four on a moderate budget — the fixed cost of the car (fuel, toll, daily rate) becomes increasingly efficient per head as the group size grows. For solo travellers, the furgon is the clear winner on price. The private transfer beats a taxi on both transparency and often on price, so there is little reason to choose an unmetered taxi over Daytrip for this route.

For further help planning the trip, visit our trip planning hub or check the Albanian Riviera FAQ for answers on visas, currency and safety.

Frequently Asked Questions

Sources & Further Reading

Door-to-door option

Skip the bus station hassle — direct shuttle from Tirana Airport

If you’re landing in Tirana and heading straight to Saranda or Ksamil, the shared shuttle bus picks you up at the airport and drops you in town. No taxi-to-bus-station detour, no luggage drama at the Tirana terminal. From $15.

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